Funding Patterns Fiscal Year 2012

January 30, 2013 (historical)

The decision to fund or not to fund a particular application is based on the assessment of scientific merit by a peer review group and on the relevance of the proposed work to the Institute's scientific and health priorities. Peer reviewers' judgments of scientific merit are expressed in "priority scores" and in percentile rankings derived from these priority scores. At any point in a given fiscal year, budgetary projections are based on awarding funds to all applications with rankings better than a certain percentile, sometimes referred to as the "pay-line." However, applications that address subjects of particular relevance to the Institute's scientific and health priorities may be considered for awards even if their assigned scores and percentile rankings would not qualify for funding under the current pay-line. Normally, a small portion of each year's budget is reserved for such "discretionary" or "select pay" awards. Projects to be funded on this basis are selected by the Director, NIAMS, following staff discussion.

In FY 2012, the pay-line for competing R01 applications extended through the percentile of 12.0. For competing R01 applications from new investigators, the payline extended through the percentile of 15.0. The success rate for all R01 & R37 applications (the number of awards divided by the number of applications) was 16.3 percent.

The charts and table below summarize the overall funding patterns for R01 applications, including 3 R01 applications that were issued as R37 MERIT Awards. (See http://www.niams.nih.gov/About_Us/Budget/12_budget_detail.asp for explanations of the R01 and R37 mechanisms). Only applications that received a percentile ranking are included. When an amended application is considered in the same fiscal year as the original, only the most recent submission is counted.

Funding Patterns for R01 applications:

Figure 1 summarizes the number of R01 applications received and grants funded at each percentile, among all investigators.

Figure 1 — R01 Applications from All Investigators

Figure 1 includes data from all categories of investigators: experienced investigators who have had NIH grants in the past, new investigators who previously have not had a substantial independent NIH award, and early stage investigators who are within 10 years of completing their training and have not had a previous NIH R01 (or R01-equivalent) grant.

The pattern is similar when applications from experienced and new investigators are analyzed separately (Figures 2 and 3).